I would show you the ones I scrapped this week, but they went to the scrap steel pile, and I am not digging through the drum to find them, way too much sharp stuff in there. Linearity on those meters is entirely dependant on the meter movement, and with the right pole piece design and the right magnetics in there you get pretty much around 0.5% accuracy on most Japanese meter movements, depending on manufacturer, but some cheap ones were only specced to 2%. I have a Hioki meter, which claims 2%, and which uses 1% resistors inside, though almost all the resistors are not E96 values but specific to the meter. Resistance was always going to be the poor side, as you really need a precision voltage source, which an AA cell is not. Better meters ( like light meters as well) used a mercury cell in there, as it has a very flat voltage curve, which gives the error you see as the cell ages, your new AAA cell might be slightly over 1V5, and as it ages it will drop, giving a slight error. In most cases analogue meter resistance readings were good for 5% resistors, any better and you went to another method, like a proper Wheatstone bridge, which was not dependant on the battery voltage, but only needed accurate resistor ratios to be accurate.